Fr. George Rutler parish priest in Manhattan

Fr. George Rutler was born in 1945 and educated as an Episcopalian across New Jersey and New York. He was an Episcopal priest for 9 years and was one of the youngest Episcopal Rectors in the nation when he was the church’s rectory that was which was the Church of the Good Shepherd in Rosemont, Pennsylvania.

The priest was consecrated by the Catholic Church in 1979. He studied in the seminary at North American College in Rome and was elevated to the diaconate by His Grace William Cardinal Baum in 1980 and was ordained a priest in St. Patrick’s Cathedral by His Honorable Terence Cardinal Cooke in 1981.

Father Rutler graduated from Dartmouth as a Rufus-Choate scholar. The graduate was at Johns Hopkins University, Johns Hopkins University, the General Theological Seminary, and the Gregorian and Angelicum Universities in Rome. He holds a Pontifical Doctorate in Sacred Theology. In England 1988, Oxford University awarded him the degree of Master of Studies. The University of Oxford awarded him the title of Masters of Study.

From 1987 to 1988, he served as a frequent preacher to students, faculty members as well as the residents of Oxford. He was the associate pastor at St. Joseph’s in Bronxville; Our Lady of Victory in the Wall Street area; and St. Agnes, in Manhattan. He was a chaplain at the University for the Archdiocese as well as the chaplain at the general hospital and an institution for mental health.

He spent 10 years as the National Chaplain to Legatos. He is also the Chaplain of the New York Guild of Catholic Lawyers and the Regional Spiritual Director of the Legion of Mary (New York and northern New Jersey) and is affiliated with The Missionaries of Charity, and other religious orders, as the instructor for Retreats. Since 1988 his TV show on a weekly basis has been broadcast across the globe via EWTN.

Cardinal Egan was appointed pastor of The Church of Our Savior effective on September 17, 2001.

Thomas More College and Christendom College conferred honorary doctorates on the latter. He is an officer of the Equestrian Order of the Holy Sepulcher, and Chaplain to the St. Andrew’s Society of the State of New York and The Robert Burns Society of the City of New York, and The West Point Society of New York.

Father Rutler has produced documentary films both in his native United States and England and has contributed to numerous popular or academic publications. As an active member of the U.S. Squash Racquets Association and has written books on the sport and also his writings on spirituality. (less)

The investigations, along with other ones, are likely to cause a flurry of scandals in the many years to follow. While all this was taking place, Pope Francis responded with an unassuming demand for a meeting of four days of bishops with seniority, which would be in Rome under the heading “The Protection of Minors in the Church.” This was like putting Mafia kingpins in charge of a criminal commission.

Prior to, during, and after his visit to Ireland, Francis had expressed the words of, “shame and sorrow.” But he didn’t show any indication of understanding the necessity of the Catholic Church radically changing itself or undertaking the true act of penance.

One of the most awe-inspiring aspects of Pope Francis’ Irish journey was the assertion in a press conference during his return visit to Rome that up until that point he was unaware about those who run the Magdalene Laundries or their scandals: “I had never heard of these mothers–they call it the laundromat of women, where an unwed woman is pregnant and goes into these hospitals.” Have you had you heard of mothers like this? After reading that I thought to myself: This is a lie. Pope Francis is lying. It’s possible that he wasn’t lying, but he could be ignorant. However, to not be aware of the Magdalene scandal that has been simmering for years was equally terrible. When I heard the words of the pope the taut wire inside my body was snapped.

The wire was beginning to extend for a quarter of a century ago, as I started my career as a Boston Globe columnist. Twenty years prior I had been a Catholic priest who was enthralled by the wars, social justice, and reforming the church. These were issues that shaped my role at The Globe. The first of the columns I wrote, written in September 1992 was a reflection on the child sexual abuse charges of a Massachusetts priest identified as James Porter. I claimed that the predation of Porter was facilitated by the Church’s larger tradition of silence to protect priests. In response to previous Globe reports on Porter, the infuriated Cardinal Bernard Law, the archbishop of Boston and the nation’s capital had issued atheism that appeared to be straight from earlier in the Middle Ages: “We call down God’s power on the media, particularly the Globe.” It took 10 years before God’s power finally was poured out to Law himself.

Its virtues as a Catholic belief have become apparent for me throughout my life. It is a better world because of the virtues of Catholicism, and I am thankful for the thousands of people and women who help bring the faith to life. Fr. George Rutler parish priest in Manhattan This is because the Catholic Church can be described as a global congregation of more than a billion people. North and South rich and impoverished as well as illiterate and intelligent — it is the only organization that transcends all borders at a similar scale. According to what James Joyce wrote in Finnegan Wake, Catholic means “Here Comes Everybody.” In the globe, there are over 200 000 Catholic schools, and more than 40,000. Catholic hospitals and health facilities, mostly in the developing nations. This is by far the most important non-governmental organization in the world that has caring and selfless people of all ages care for the poor, instruct the uninitiated, heal sick people, and strive to protect the minimum guidelines for the good of all. The world requires the church of these legions to be logical, historical-minded, and pluralist, dedicated towards peace and a proponent of equality for women as well as a tribune for justice.

 

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